The Street Lawyer

The Street Lawyer

First edition cover
Author John Grisham
Country United States
Language English
Genre Legal thriller
Publisher Belfry Holdings Inc.
Publication date
1998
Published in English
1998
Media type Hardcover, paperback
Pages 347
ISBN 0-440-22570-1

The Street Lawyer is a legal thriller novel by John Grisham. It was Grisham's ninth novel. The book was released in the United States on 1 January 1998, published by Bantam Books,[1] and on 30 March 1998 in the UK, published by Century.[2]

It shares with other Grisham novels ("The Associate","The Litigators") the major plot element of a lawyer getting fed up with the life of a giant law firm, employing hundreds of lawyers and solely concerned with the making of money. In all three novels, the protagonist ends up breaking away and taking up a job which is incomparably less well-paid - but which is still far more satisfying (morally as well as professionally). Grisham's partisanship on this issue is evident, and he clearly approves wholeheartedly such choices made by his characters.

Plot

A homeless man, identifying himself only as "Mister," enters the offices of the powerful Washington D.C. law firm Drake & Sweeney and takes many of the lawyers hostage while angrily demanding information about some kind of eviction that took place. Although he is eventually shot and killed by a police sniper and the hostages freed, one of the hostages, an antitrust lawyer named Michael Brock, is concerned by what he has learned and feels compelled to investigate further.

He finds his way to the 14th Street Legal Clinic, where he meets Mordecai Green, an advocate for the homeless, who asks him to help one night at a homeless shelter. Green, along with his abrasive but brilliant and committed staff (an idealistic Jewish lawyer named Abraham and a Latina office genius/jack of all trades named Sophia) work to provide legal help to the most downtrodden members of society. As Brock's investigation deepens, he finds that his own employer was complicit in an illegal eviction, which eventually resulted in the death of a young homeless family. It involved the sudden approval of a federal building project on the site of a condemned building that had been serving as a rent-payment housing center for formerly homeless families; due to the rent system, these individuals were tenants and not squatters and thus entitled to a full legal eviction/contestment process, but a senior Drake & Sweeney attorney ignored this information because the firm had a large stake in ensuring the federal project start on time, and thus illegally threw everyone out into the freezing winter streets. He takes a confidential file, intending to copy it, but is quickly suspected of its theft.

Shocked by what he has found, Brock leaves his firm to take a poorly paid position with the 14th Street Legal Clinic, which works to protect the rights of the homeless. This leads to the severing of his links to his previous white-collar life, as his already-dying marriage officially ends in an amicable divorce. He later becomes emotionally involved in the case of a woman named Ruby, whose drug addiction led to her losing custody of her son. He also meets a lovely young homeless advocate named Megan and they start a relationship. As Drake & Sweeney comes after Brock with theft and malpractice allegations, the clinic launches a lawsuit against the law firm and its business partners. The firm makes a deal where Brock has his license suspended for a short time, while they settle for a large amount of money and fire the sleazy senior partner whose actions led to the young family's death.

Drake & Sweeney's head partner, deeply troubled by the events, offers to make his entire staff available for pro bono work to assist the clinic in fighting for the rights of homeless people. The book ends with Brock taking a short vacation with Megan and Ruby, and them reflecting on their lives.

Characters

Reception

The novel received generally positive reviews. Charles Spencer wrote in the Sunday Telegraph that "no one does it better than Grisham" and that the book is "as unputdownable as ever".[4] Mat Coward wrote in his review in The Independent that the novel is "fluent and fascinating" and mentioned "Few writers have so much to say, the skills to make reading what they say an irresistible pleasure - and the clout to be able to be able to say it to an audience of millions".[5]

Michiko Kakutani of the New York Times gave the novel a negative review, stating "Grisham is too busy charging ahead to bother fleshing out any of these developments" and describing the novel as "a brand-name novel with an unlikable hero, a slapdash plot and some truly awful prose."[6] It reached #1 on the New York Times bestsellers chart, maintaining the position for several weeks.[7][8][9][10]

Unsold television pilot

In 2003, plans were announced, and a television pilot filmed, for a proposed small screen adaptation of the novel. Produced by Touchstone Television, the show was to star Eddie Cibrian as Brock, KaDee Strickland, Mario Van Peebles and Hal Holbrook. Paris Barclay directed the pilot, which was scripted by Brian Koppelman and David Levien. For reasons that were never made public, the show was never given a full season pick-up.[11]

References

  1. http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000UX7DRA
  2. http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0712678212
  3. Grisham, John (1998). The Street Lawyer. p. 348.
  4. "The Street Lawyer". Nadpriemer.
  5. "Thursday's Book". London: Mat Coward. 26 March 1998.
  6. Kakutani, Michiko (10 February 1998). "BOOKS OF THE TIMES; A Lawyer Converts To Virtue". The New York Times.
  7. "BEST SELLERS: February 22, 1998". The New York Times. 22 February 1998. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  8. "BEST SELLERS: March 1, 1998". The New York Times. 1 March 1998. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  9. "BEST SELLERS: March 29, 1998". The New York Times. 29 March 1998. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  10. "BEST SELLERS: April 12, 1998". The New York Times. 12 April 1998. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  11. Street Lawyer, The (ABC). The Futon Critic.
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